Elevenses: The Right To Be Wrong
Liz Truss gets offered a shot at redemption where many other politicians would be publicly castigated.
Liz Truss gets offered a shot at redemption where many other politicians would be publicly castigated.
The former prime minister continued to defend her failed bid to boost growth in her first interview since stepping down.
Despite being voted in by a measly 0.17 per cent of Brits and having a net favourability rating of -70 she had a democratic mandate, apparently.
She is expected to be joined by two other former prime ministers, Australia’s Scott Morrison and Belgium’s Guy Verhofstadt.
Apparently causing market chaos and shredding Britain's reputation internationally is no bad thing.
Labour suspects that it was Liz Truss’s official plastic he used to do it.
White powder residue was found after events held at Chevening and Downing Street, say sources as the governments attempts drug crackdown.
From Mick Lynch roasting the media, to Liz Truss and Gary Neville being burnt, all the way to a Ukrainian singer swearing at Putin.
The ex-prime minister lasted just six weeks in No10, making her the UK's shortest-serving premier in history.
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